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1Building the Software on an Acorn RISC OS system
2
3The directory contrib/acorn contains support for compiling the library under
4Acorn C/C++ under Acorn's RISC OS 3.10 or above. Subsequent pathnames will
5use the Acorn format: The full-stop or period character is a pathname
6delimeter, and the slash character is not interpreted; the reverse position
7from Unix. Thus "libtiff/tif_acorn.c" becomes "libtiff.tif_acorn/c".
8
9This support was contributed by Peter Greenham.
10(peterg@angmulti.demon.co.uk).
11
12Installing LibTIFF:
13
14LIBTIFF uses several files which have names longer than the normal RISC OS
15maximum of ten characters. This complicates matters. Maybe one day Acorn will
16address the problem and implement long filenames properly. Until then this
17gets messy, especially as I'm trying to do this with obeyfiles and not have
18to include binaries in this distribution.
19
20First of all, ensure you have Truncate configured on (type *Configure
21Truncate On) Although it is, of course, preferable to have long filenames,
22LIBTIFF can be installed with short filenames, and it will compile and link
23without problems. However, getting it there is more problematic.
24contrib.acorn.install is an installation obeyfile which will create a normal
25Acorn-style library from the source (ie: with c, h and o folders etc.), but
26needs the distribution library to have been unpacked into a location which is
27capable of supporting long filenames, even if only temporarily.
28
29My recommendation, until Acorn address this problem properly, is to use Jason
30Tribbeck's LongFilenames , or any other working system that gives you long
31filenames, like a nearby NFS server for instance.
32
33If you are using Longfilenames, even if only temporarily to install LIBTIFF,
34unpack the TAR into a RAMDisc which has been longfilenamed (ie: *addlongfs
35ram) and then install from there to the hard disk. Unfortunately
36Longfilenames seems a bit unhappy about copying a bunch of long-named files
37across the same filing system, but is happy going between systems. You'll
38need to create a ramdisk of about 2Mb.
39
40Now you can run the installation script I've supplied (in contrib.acorn),
41which will automate the process of installing LIBTIFF as an Acorn-style
42library. The syntax is as follows:
43
44install <source_dir> <dest_dir>
45
46Install will then create <dest_dir> and put the library in there. For
47example, having used LongFilenames on the RAMDisk and unpacked the library
48into there, you can then type:
49
50Obey RAM::RamDisc0.$.contrib.acorn.install RAM::RamDisc0.$ ADFS::4.$.LIBTIFF
51
52It doesn't matter if the destination location can cope with long filenames or
53not. The filenames will be truncated if necessary (*Configure Truncate On if
54you get errors) and all will be well.
55
56Compiling LibTIFF:
57
58Once the LibTIFF folder has been created and the files put inside, making the
59library should be just a matter of running 'SetVars' to set the appropriate
60system variables, then running 'Makefile'.
61
62OSLib
63
64OSLib is a comprehensive API for RISC OS machines, written by Jonathan
65Coxhead of Acorn Computers (although OSLib is not an official Acorn product).
66Using the OSLib SWI veneers produces code which is more compact and more
67efficient than code written using _kernel_swi or _swi. The Acorn port of
68LibTIFF can take advantage of this if present. Edit the Makefile and go to
69the Static dependencies section. The first entry is:
70
71# Static dependencies:
72@.o.tif_acorn: @.c.tif_acorn
73 cc $(ccflags) -o @.o.tif_acorn @.c.tif_acorn
74Change the cc line to:
75
76 cc $(ccflags) -DINCLUDE_OSLIB -o @.o.tif_acorn @.c.tif_acorn
77
78Remember, however, that OSLib is only recommended for efficiency's sake. It
79is not required.